From: Institute for Global Communications <labornews@igc.apc.org>
Subject: Job Related Injuries Very Common In US

Job Related Injuries Very Common in US

Associated Press. 27 July, 1997

CHICAGO (AP) -- Job-related injuries
and illnesses are more common than most people believe, costing the
nation far more than AIDS or Alzheimer's disease and at least as much
as cancer or heart disease, a new report says.

"Occupational injuries and illnesses are an insufficiently appreciated
contributor to the total burden of health care costs in the United
States,'' researchers say in Monday's issue of the Archives of Internal
Medicine.

The researchers combined many sources of government and other data for
what they believe are the first national estimates of job-related
injuries and illnesses in a single year.

In 1992, about 6,500 Americans died and 13.2 million were hurt from
work-related causes, said the researchers, led by J. Paul Leigh of the
economics department at San Jose State University in California.

That toll averages to 18 deaths and 36,000 injuries a day, compared
with government estimates of 17 workers fatally hurt each day and 9,000
nonfatally injured.

Occupational illnesses -- such as lung diseases and lead poisoning --
caused 60,300 deaths and 862,200 illnesses in 1992, the researchers
said. That averages to 165 deaths and more than 2,300 new ailments
daily, compared to government figures of 137 and 1,095 daily in those
categories, respectively.

And the new report probably underestimates the totals because injuries
and illnesses are undercounted, the researchers said.

In all, the direct costs of injuries and illnesses totaled $65 billion
in 1992 ($178 million a day), the researchers said. Indirect costs --
including lost wages -- were $106 billion ($290 million a day), they
said. That made the total $171 billion that year ($468 million a day.)

That is far more than the 1992 cost of AIDS, which was $30 billion,
excluding the costs of administrating worker's compensation, Social
Security or health insurance benefits. Occupational injuries and
illnesses were $155 billion, excluding those administrative costs, the
researchers said.

Similarly, the direct and indirect economic burden of Alzheimer's
disease in 1992 was much less than work-related deaths and injuries.
Alzheimer's totaled $67.3 billion, including administrative costs, the
researchers said.

And for heart and all other blood-vessel diseases, the total was $164.3
billion. For cancer, it was $170.7 billion. For musculoskeletal
diseases, such as arthritis and osteoporosis, it was $149 billion,
researchers said.

"The authors make a very good case that the magnitude of the
occupational health burden really rivals other major problems,'' said
Dr. Linda Rosenstock, director of the National Institute for
Occupational Safety and Health.

Her agency, part of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention,
helped pay for the research but did not have a hand in its design or
conclusions, and she was not involved in the work.

She said the report should encourage the nation to put a greater
emphasis on workplace safety.

"We have tools for prevention here, in the workplace, that sometimes
just don't exist for other illnesses,'' she said by telephone from
Washington. "These are all inherently preventable illnesses and
injuries.''